International Journal of Mathematics and Mathematical Sciences
Volume 27 (2001), Issue 2, Pages 125-130
doi:10.1155/S0161171201004173

Illumination by Taylor polynomials

Alan Horwitz

Penn State University, 25 Yearsley Mill Road, Media 19063, PA, USA

Abstract

Let f(x) be a differentiable function on the real line , and let P be a point not on the graph of f(x). Define the illumination index of P to be the number of distinct tangents to the graph of f which pass through P. We prove that if f is continuous and nonnegative on , fm>0 outside a closed interval of , and f has finitely many zeros on , then any point Pbelow the graph of f has illumination index 2. This result fails in general if f is not bounded away from 0 on . Also, if f has finitely many zeros and f is not nonnegative on , then some point below the graph has illumination index not equal to 2. Finally, we generalize our results to illumination by odd order Taylor polynomials.